Seeking dismissal of case, Scientology says official is biased
By THOMAS C. TOBIN
St. Petersburg Times
May 27, 2000
CLEARWATER -- Medical Examiner Joan Wood's investigation into the death of
Scientologist Lisa McPherson was so flawed and biased that criminal
charges against the Church of Scientology should be dismissed, the church
argues in a new motion.
Wood violated her own policies and failed to preserve evidence that might
vindicate Scientology, the church alleges.
She also compromised the objectivity required of her by state law, the
document says, displaying "an all-consuming passion to prosecute the
church by inventing new creative medical theories" in McPherson's death.
The church's Clearwater branch is charged with abuse of a disabled adult
and practicing medicine without a license on McPherson as Scientology
staffers tried to nurse her through a severe mental breakdown in 1995.
After 17 days, she died of a blood clot while on the way to a hospital.
The new document -- a motion to dismiss, filed this week -- comes at a
complicated juncture in the case, now halfway into its second year.
The church first asked Chief Circuit Judge Susan F. Schaeffer last August
to dismiss the case on grounds it unconstitutionally burdens a religion.
Schaeffer entertained the request at a two-day hearing in early April,
promising a ruling by early May.
Now, nearly a month after that deadline, the judge says she has yet to
collect her thoughts and seriously consider the motion. That would be a
waste of time if State Attorney Bernie McCabe were to drop the case on his
own because of problems with Wood's testimony, Schaeffer said in a recent
interview.
"I'm not going to rush to beat them to the punch," she said.
McCabe's office began to review its case against the church in February
after Wood officially changed the manner of McPherson's death to
"accident." Previously, she had called it "undetermined" and blamed the
death on "bed rest and severe dehydration," but those words no longer
appear on the death certificate.
Though Wood did not explain the change, it appeared to support the notion
that Scientology was not at fault in the death. Not so, say prosecutors,
who have since talked to Wood and contend the veteran medical examiner
maintains McPherson died of "medical neglect," in part because of
dehydration.
Still, prosecutors are worried about what they refer to as the "troubling
inconsistency" between Wood's statements to them and the revised death
certificate.
McCabe's office may decide as early as next week whether to continue
prosecuting the case.